Europa Środkowa idzie na wolność
导演: |
Mirosława Jasińskiego |
制片国家/地区: |
波兰 |
类型: |
纪录片 |
年代: |
2012 |
豆瓣评分: |
0 |
影伴评分: |
0
|
剧情简介
In November 1989, an international seminar "Central Europe. Culture at the Crossroads, Between Totalitarianism and Commercialism" and a review of Czechoslovak Independent Culture, which marked the culmination of the activities of the Polish-Czechoslovak Solidarity community and also served as a prelude to the Velvet Revolution in Prague. The long-standing cooperation of the SPC... (展开全部)
In November 1989, an international seminar "Central Europe. Culture at the Crossroads, Between Totalitarianism and Commercialism" and a review of Czechoslovak Independent Culture, which marked the culmination of the activities of the Polish-Czechoslovak Solidarity community and also served as a prelude to the Velvet Revolution in Prague. The long-standing cooperation of the SPCz (and the "Polish-Hungarian Solidarity" established in February 1989) led to the establishment of friendly contacts between the oppositionists of Poland, Czechoslovakia and Hungary. After the 1989 transition, they appeared to form new elites in their respective countries. Earlier ties, creating a special political climate, largely helped in the first three years in the close cooperation that resulted in the realization of two major projects - the creation of the Visegrad Triangle and the removal of Soviet troops from the entire Region.
Something that is taken for granted today, in practice took place under complex, often dramatic circumstances. At critical moments, it was the old contacts and the trust built up then that allowed decisions to be made that, as it turned out, were crucial to the further fate of the entire region.
Starting from the Wroclaw Festival, the film shows how cooperation in the late 1980s resulted in the formation of the Visegrad Triangle and how the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Czechoslovakia, Poland and Hungary proceeded. By definition, the timeframe covered by Miroslaw Jasinski's documentary is the years 1990-1992. The events described are shown in the context of the situation in individual countries and the world, which is important for understanding the scale of difficulties and the importance of decisions taken at the time.
Miroslaw Jasinski - co-founder of the Independent Students' Union at the University of Wroclaw, initiator of the underground Polish-Czechoslovak Solidarity movement, later director of the Polish Institute in Prague, author of the documentaries Forest, Street and Cellar Games and The Czech Republic After Five Years.